7
I still want to know how much they are worth! l Then find a buyer The market approach indicates that market value is established by selling addresses If the buyers offer is less than your calculation of V then you wont sell. The if buyers offer is greater than the buyers current calculation of V then the buyer is undertaking future price speculation

8
So if I can sell addresses, maybe I should hoard them instead? In a finite resource market with escalating demand the market price starts to exhibit a scarcity premium, where the scarcity premium is related to the level of demand over supply Hoarding and speculative buying can be used to establish a monopoly position and thereby exert complete control over supply and price De Beers is an excellent example of this market trading practice in the diamond wholesale market

9
So... Lets speculate and buy up the address pool l But this is not a monopoly market of finite goods l Application gateways and address translation technologies can be deployed to provide desired functionality in many many cases

10
But gateway technologies cost money too l correct C = C cost of deployment Value = V routeability + V security +V portability - R reduced functionality - C with depreciated capital component l So a non-speculative buyer will never offer more than V for IPv4 addresses l There is now an established upper bound on a scarcity price premium so a monopoly of supply of resource essential to functionality cannot be secured.

11
Are there any other upper bounds? l IPv6 l Similar Cost and Value calculation can be undertaken l As V6 develops the cost will come down and the value will increase

12
So Whats the Value of an IPv4 Address ? l Whatever the market will bear l But people tell me that addresses are free True - the registries give away new IPv4 addresses

13
What about address registries? l The registeries limit trading due to: dumping free IPv4 addresses on the market from the unallocated IPv4 address pool polices which deny a traded address access to the registry l These policies reduce the production value of alternative technologies through artificial price fixing of the IPv4 address, inhibiting their deployment cannot endure as the unallocated address pool shrinks

14
What will happen …. l IPv4 addresses will be traded as a market commodity sooner or later either in a chaotic fashion or within the constraints of a fair and open market l Also: Alternative translation technologies will have a wider market and increase production IPv6 will have adopters moving beyond experimentation